Portfolio Optimization under Habit Formation
Roman Naryshkin, Matt Davison

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new habit formation model in portfolio optimization, allowing for more realistic consumption patterns that depend on past consumption, and compares it with standard models to reveal insights on consumption behavior.
Contribution
It develops a novel mathematical formulation of habit formation in investment models, enabling analysis of non-addictive consumption and providing numerical solutions.
Findings
Consumption increases over time with habit formation
Consumption is less sensitive to market fluctuations
Decreasing risk aversion explained within the model's limitations
Abstract
The "standard" Merton formulation of optimal investment and consumption involves optimizing the integrated lifetime utility of consumption, suitably discounted, together with the discounted future bequest. In this formulation the utility of consumption at any given time depends only on the amount consumed at that time. However, it is both theoretically and empirically reasonable that an individuals utility of consumption would depend on past consumption history. Economists term this "Habit Formation". We introduce a new formulation of habit formation which allows non-addictive consumption patterns for a wide variety of utility specification. In this paper we construct a simple mathematical description of this habit formation and present numerical solutions. We compare the results with the standard ones and draw insights obtained from the habit formation. The consumption path tends to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic theories and models · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Financial Markets and Investment Strategies
